[Vo]:Comments on Barium and Barium Ferrite, Part l

2007-10-14 Thread Jones Beene
If it should turn out that a self-powering electrical circuit has been discovered by Ron Stiffler - and which is only possible in a simple configuration using a magnetic core of barium ferrite - and that no other core will suffice, then the obvious question is- what is it about barium that

Re: [Vo]:Re: CE4

2007-10-14 Thread Harry Veeder
Ron, I have a suggestion. See if the air temperature affects the brightness of the light. Harry On 12/10/2007 2:21 PM, EnergyLab wrote: Hey if I can use 100 different addresses for the same fee, why not? :-) Boy I really hate to give those figures, I have enough trouble from what I have

RE: [Vo]:Re: CE4

2007-10-14 Thread EnergyLab
Harry, yes it does but this is not indicative of anything meaning full. This is that all capacities in the circuit are affected by temperature, some have a positive and some have a negative drift and they do not cancel out. The BW for optimal brightness is very narrow. The energy is still there on

Re: [Vo]:Re: CE4

2007-10-14 Thread Harry Veeder
On 14/10/2007 11:57 AM, EnergyLab wrote: Harry, yes it does but this is not indicative of anything meaning full. This is that all capacities in the circuit are affected by temperature, some have a positive and some have a negative drift and they do not cancel out. The BW for optimal

Re: [Vo]: CE4

2007-10-14 Thread Jones Beene
EnergyLab wrote: I will show that later (a 5V dip oscillator), this should solves a bit of the trouble with the gen drift. What about a X-tal OC for generating a signal at a specific frequency : http://www.t-mallusa.com/product_info.php?products_id=2894878 Two problems - there is none

Re: [Vo]:meeting next month with this inventor

2007-10-14 Thread William Beaty
On Sat, 13 Oct 2007, Todd Hathaway wrote: I talked to Mr. Owens today, and he sounds legit. Across the board good vibes from him. My experiences suggest that he is the real deal. A couple of notes: 1. Has he closed the loop and made his device power itself continuously? If not, then it's

RE: [Vo]: CE4

2007-10-14 Thread Hoyt A. Stearns Jr.
3.58 MHz is probably a rounded version of 3.579545, the most common xtal in the world -- the NTSC color subcarrier frequency. Hoyt Stearns Scottsdale, Arizona http://HoytStearns.com -Original Message- From: Jones Beene [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Sunday, October 14, 2007 2:19 PM

Re: [Vo]: CE4

2007-10-14 Thread Jones Beene
So Hoyt -- Have you replicated this circuit using a cannibalized TV xtal ? Hoyt A. Stearns Jr. wrote: 3.58 MHz is probably a rounded version of 3.579545, the most common xtal in the world -- the NTSC color subcarrier frequency. Hoyt Stearns Scottsdale, Arizona http://HoytStearns.com

Re: [Vo]:Comments on Barium and Barium Ferrite, Part l

2007-10-14 Thread Jones Beene
R.C.Macaulay wrote: and in turn acquired by National Lead Co and finally acquired by Halliburton.. My opinion of barium.. anyone owning a desposit is sitting on a gold mine. Isn't it amazing how certain ultra-profitable companies, which are decidedly NON-innovators in their lucrative

Re: [Vo]:Comments on Barium and Barium Ferrite, Part l

2007-10-14 Thread R.C.Macaulay
Jones wrote.. Isn't it amazing how certain ultra-profitable companies, which are decidedly NON-innovators in their lucrative fields, but instead are extremely well-connected - nevertheless manage to magically find the important strategic assets in emerging technology and quietly secure them

RE: [Vo]: CE4

2007-10-14 Thread Hoyt A. Stearns Jr.
Hi Dr. B. I haven't looked at the project at all yet, being too busy with my Steorn and Noether's theorem experiments, as well as some activity with some new tip propulsion helicopter activity. I guess I'll get to it eventually. There's just so much material to investigate ( good or bad thing